The only piece about progress in Iraq that makes some small amount of
sense.  If it's true, it's good news
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A Network of Truces
By DAVID BROOKS
Published: April 8, 2008

The U.S. brought no shortage of misconceptions into Iraq, but surely
the longest lasting has been what you might call: Founding Fatherism.
This is the belief that peace will come to the country when the
nation's political elites gather at a convention hall and make a
series of grand compromises involving power-sharing and a new
constitution.

The Bush administration has been pushing the Iraqis to make this sort
of grand compromise for years — to little effect. The Democrats
happily declare that there has been no political progress in Iraq
because this grand compromise is the only kind of political progress
they can conceive of.

The grand compromise model would be appropriate if Iraq were a Western
country living in the shadow of the Magna Carta. But Iraq is not that
kind of country.

As Philip Carl Salzman argues in "Culture and Conflict in the Middle
East" (brilliantly reviewed by Stanley Kurtz in The Weekly Standard),
many Middle Eastern societies are tribal. The most salient structure
is the local lineage group. National leaders do not make giant
sacrifices on behalf of the nation because their higher loyalty is to
the sect or clan. Order is achieved not by the top-down imposition of
abstract law. Instead, order is achieved through fluid balance of
power agreements between local groups.

In a society like this, political progress takes different forms. It's
not top down. It's bottom up. And this is exactly the sort of progress
we are seeing in Iraq. While the Green Zone politicians have taken
advantage of the surge by trying to entrench their own power, things
are happening at the grass-roots.

Iraqis are growing more optimistic. Fifty-five percent of Iraqis say
their lives are going well, up from 39 percent last August, according
to a poll conducted by ABC News and other global television networks.
Forty-nine percent now say the U.S. was right to invade Iraq, the
highest figure recorded since this poll began in 2004.

More generally, the Iraqi people are sick of war and are punishing
those leaders and forces that perpetrate it. "A vital factor in the
security improvement is public backlash against the chaos and
extremism of the past five years," declared Yahia Said of the Revenue
Watch Institute in written testimony to the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee.

And, as one would expect, the local clans have taken control. Iraqi
politics have become hyperlocalized, Colin Kahl, a Georgetown
professor and Obama adviser, has observed. The most prestigious groups
in Iraqi society are tribes and Awakening Councils. Many of these
councils earned legitimacy by fighting during the height of the
violence and have now come out in the open as local authorities.

These groups have created a fluid network of fragile truces. They
squabble over money, power, ideology and sectarian issues. But they
have incentives to keep the peace. Sunni leaders have come to realize
that they can't win a civil war against the Shiites. Shiite militia
leaders recognize their own prestige and power drops the more they
fight.

As Stephen Biddle of the Council on Foreign Relations observed in his
Senate testimony last week: "This does not mean sectarian harmony or
brotherly affection in Iraq. But it does mean that cold, hard
strategic reality increasingly makes acting on hatred too costly for
Sunni insurgents and Shiite militias."

The surge didn't create the network of truces, but the truces couldn't
have happened without the surge. More than 70,000 local council
members are paid by the Americans. They rely on the U.S. military to
enforce bargains and deter truce-breaking. Thanks to these
arrangements, ethno-sectarian violence dropped by 90 percent between
June 2007 and March 2008. That's the result of political progress, not
just counterinsurgency techniques.

It has become common to belittle these truces. After all, they are not
written by legislators on parchment. And indeed there's a significant
chance that they will indeed collapse and the country will devolve
into anarchy.

But in certain societies, this is the way order is established,
through what Salzman calls "balanced opposition." As long as the
network of truces holds, then the next president (Democrat or
Republican) will have an overwhelming incentive to nurture the fragile
peace.

That will mean drawing down U.S. troops at a slow pace, continuing the
local reconstruction efforts, supporting local elections and reaching
an informal agreement with Iran and the Saudis to reduce outside
interference. Iraq will look like a lot of places in the world: a
series of cold and fragile understandings, with occasional flare-ups
(like in Basra), but no genocide and no terror state.

At this week's hearings on Capitol Hill, Democrats will declare that
the surge has not produced political progress and therefore the whole
thing is for naught. That's wrong. There has been political progress.
It just doesn't look the way we expected it to.

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